Originally posted by brindle
He owed less than a penny,probably 0.5 cent.What a deadbeat.Bank of America had the common decency not to round it up to a penny,therefore providing
the customer unneccessary financial hardship.In light of the generosity,this person should cut a check for a penny and hand deliver it to the bank so
they can replenish their financial reserves.

This thread www.abovetopsecret.com... state writing a check for less than $1 is illegal. He might very well be put in jail
or get a big fine for paying that penny with a check, just so he could save his house.
Sad times we live in...

Its probably much more costly for BoA then it will be for him. They spent the oney mailing him a bill for 0.00 and any processing for paperwork for
foreclosure. Then the time on the phone if he calls them and fixes it. The the time to fix his credit bureau.
They arent going to go to court just to lose a case that is obviously a computing error.

It will be a test on his patience for sure but technology isn't perfect, especially since humans make it lol. Hopefully they are speedy on fixing
the CBR for him though since that will be important in the meantime.

I wouldn't even try calling BOA. I would wait to see how they could justify foreclosure on my house. If they even tried they would have one hell of
a law suit, and the negative publicity about BOA would go national. I wouldn't waste the cost of a stamp to send them a check for 0. How ridiculous
is that?

i'm not defending BofA but this is a sad reminder of todays USA workplace: horribly understaffed & overworked. those 'left behind' following
lay-off after lay-off are so deep in doo-doo they no longer may function effectively. they have the work of many people piled high on their desks.

worse yet, many companies who are doing well and making money ( hello, Bank of America ) step right up and take advantage in the economy down-turn to
fire people for the sake of firing people. saves them money all around while making their employees miserable. the lowest paid clerks and the
customers suffer the worst.

i hope the bankers and all the other money-hungry scumbags in the USA burn in the fiery pits of hell.

I never will understand why most of us Americans buy into financing an average of 250,000 to 500,000 for a tiny house on a tiny lot, and paying taxes
on double of what the true market value is these days. Ditto for cars. Houses (and auto) and basic needs - why are they so outrageously overpriced?
Anyways, BOA is behinds hundreds of foreclosure sales, mortgage & mers sales. Basically, BOA has exhibited a pattern of selling bank-owned property
and managing to reposess them a few days after receiving payment in full at closing. and the Fed looks the other way on these bankster buddes. Ponzi
scheme on roids, i tell ya! www.youtube.com...

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